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Published on Taipei Times http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2007/12/26/2003394199 EDITORIAL: Chiang Kai-shek's party favor Wednesday, Dec 26, 2007, Page 8
The legislative elections appear to be not so much a contest between President Chen Shui-bian ( There is good reason for the DPP to be pessimistic about its prospects in next month's elections. The party has been in power for more than seven years; consequently it has few issues to explore with a fresh voice. The legislative elections -- which require strong policy initiatives and local campaigns -- have been neglected as a consequence. The new single-district, two-ballot system is also unlikely to benefit the DPP, which will struggle to garner anywhere near half of the seats in the legislature. But there is some interest over which DPP candidates can take advantage of the largely irrelevant issue of mausoleums containing the tyrants of yesteryear. Firm KMT resistance to changing the name of the former Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall and the wording on the front gate's plaques seems to be consistent with a DPP strategy of making the KMT appear fanatical and beholden to peripheral causes.
This appearance has been reinforced by the KMT's response to the removal of military guards from the mausoleums of Chiang and his son, former president Chiang Ching-kuo ( The DPP government's decision to remove guards from the mausoleums and have the Taoyuan County Government take over their management are eminently reasonable -- and from the perspective of the victims of the White Terror, absolutely necessary.
When Chiang Fang Chih-yi ( The Cabinet had planned to move the Chiangs to the Wuchihshan Military Cemetery, which the Chiang family had agreed to, and the government allocated nearly US$1 million for renovations.
But because KMT Legislator John Chiang (
The KMT was a foreign government that considered itself temporarily based in Taiwan. It wanted to rule all of China. Such sentiment still exists in the party; no wonder that the fourth-generation Demos Chiang ( The family matters of the Chiangs have become KMT matters on the eve of national elections for the legislature and the presidency. This shows that the Chiang family is still intimately connected to the KMT's vision for Taiwan.
The DPP surely must be congratulating itself that, after all this time, it still has Chiang Kai-shek to thank for exposing the KMT's hollow core -- and obscuring its own inability to develop a substantial legislative campaign.
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